Paul,
Before you read your log and have a heart attack that someone has ripped off all your data, I wanted to explain what I was doing. I work for the federal courts and I'm building an emergency SMS notification system so that judges and staff could be alerted in the event of a serious emergency (such as 9/11). In order to build something like this, I obviously needed to know not only the cell phone number of everyone (which we have) but also the cell phone provider. As you probably know, the hi-tech United States doesn't yet have transparent SMS services that most Europeans take for granted. In any case, I needed area codes, prefixes, and cell phone provider names to build my data base. Then all that's missing is email domains for each provider using SMS , e.g. Nextel uses messaging.nextel.com. When I get this finished, I'll be glad to shoot you a copy of the domains of all the providers I can find. It might be a piece of data you would want to consider adding to your already formidable data base down the road. Thanks for your wonderful web site!
–wm

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oh and let us also review "searched every letter in the dictionary"
was that supposed to be a funny? or am I dense?
Usually people search the alphabet for letters…and search dictionaries for words… *shrug* maybe thats just me ;oþ

A dictionary attack doesn't imply they used words from a dictionary.
They ran what appeared to be a script that requested the names of several phone companies, and then requested the alphabet.
A dictionary attack is where you use a list of words (or single characters) and run them sequentially against the target.
🙂

But considering this is the first time the DOJ has ever sent me a letter where they were happy, this is a good thing 😉

The part about data I created being used to page federal judges is even cooler.